By Alfredo C. Garvida, Jr.
Contributor
The
political climate in the Philippines has
turned 360 degrees around last week when President [Benigno Simeon C.] Aquino [III]
entertained the idea previously echoed out by Sec. Mar Roxas and the Liberal
Party that the Constitution be amended to allow him to run for a second term.
Their argument was couched on the notion that given the economic advancements
now taking place in the country, there is a great need for Aquino to stay in
his office further to firm up the transformation process he has begun for the
nation.
Indications on initial survey
reflected a slight advantage of those favoring his term extension, but a spot
survey conducted by ABS-CBN on live broadcast last Monday, August 18, 2014,
dramatically increased the favoring side at a 63-37 ratio. Clearly, this ratio indicated
that a great majority of the Filipinos still agree that Mr. Aquino's mode of
transforming the nation is on the right track and that they'd rather leave this
transformation process in his hands than taking a chance on somebody
else's.
The term extension issue is
the hottest potato now dominating the political rhetoric virtually pushing
Napoles and the President's DAP issue to the backseat. Yet, jolted by this new
development, Aquino's enemies are now invoking his parents' legacy of fighting
a dictatorial regime as a counter argument to the merits of this fresh
move.
The pros and cons are
sporting meritorious reasons of their own however. The bottom line though is
whether the call to term extension is legitimate. Some call it a bluff, to
reinvigorate the President's waning popularity on account of the DAP
controversy; or to retest the people's faith in his governance as a barometer
of the strength of his endorsement on the candidate he covets to replace him
should this take place. Some call it legitimate, however, given the consistency
of his purported candidate's poor showing in the surveys. If this latter belief
be the truth, it clearly defines the kind of trust President Aquino has on his
mother's erstwhile avid supporter and their family friend, Vice President
Jejomar Binay, who leads the surveys on the forthcoming presidential race.
It would be unwise to assume
that Aquino's distrust on the Vice President is on the basis of governance
competence—for Binay is a bright and politically experienced man. It has to be
on the basis of the issue of corruption: Perhaps, the President believes that
political dynasty, as what Binay is practicing now—his son and his daughter are
the mayor and congressman of Makati City, their socio-political domain, and
another daughter is as a member of the Philippine Senate—is anathema to his war
against corruption. And corruption is what he is earnestly trying to eliminate
as a prelude to change, isn't it?
For all practical purposes,
the Binays own Makati, the richest city in this country; but the son, who
succeeded the father before the latter became the Vice President is now in hot
water—along with his dad, unfortunately—at the Office of the Ombudsman on
corruption charges stemming from an alleged P2 billion overpricing on the
construction cost of Makati's public parking building. If there be truth
to their accuser's allegation that the building in question has cost more than
a posh condominium building in Makati, the Vice President will be in trouble.
Scenarios like this are just the agonizing debris of the main anathema to
change, which is political dynasty.
Perhaps, the President too is
dreadful of what Binay may do on his allies that Aquino put to trial for
plunder and corruption charges. Perhaps, the President also fears that with
Binay at the helm of government, the dreadful tentacles of political dynasty
will grow even more. For how could one indeed rebuff the glory and privilege of
having a son as mayor of the richest city in the country and two daughters as
congresswoman and senator?
Political dynasty, frankly
speaking, epitomizes greed, and greed is what breeds corruption; and as what
Mr. Aquino has said, and echoed out by presidential wannabe Sen. Allan Peter
Cayetano in his pre-campaign propaganda sorties, "kung walang kurap ay
walang mahirap." Ironically, Cayetano is a political dynasty
practitioner himself as his wife and brother are the mayor and congressman of
Taguig City respectively, and his sister, Pia Cayetano, is a member like him of
the Philippine Senate. He is one of the Binays’ staunchest critics, but mind
you, these guys are in the same boat: The good senator and his wife are facing
corruption charges too—before the Office of the Ombudsman.
Mar Roxas, the President's
candidate to replace him, is a well-bred, decent man coming from a family of
decent politicians and business people. His name has never been involved in any
scandal of any kind. He is bright, diligent and known to be incorruptible,
therefore, it is only right for the President to covet him as his successor.
But his survey numbers are not moving in the presidential race. He lacks the
charisma of a Grace Poe, or verbosity of a Chiz Escudero, but from an angle of
competence and trust, he's got to be the man. And this had to be the
frustrating compulsion that pushed Mr. Aquino to declare his openness to the
revision of the Constitution for purposes of enabling him to run for a second
term, however contradictory it might be to what his parents had stood for in
their times.
But the political realities
then are no longer what they are now. Time is the enemy against our race to
change. The reform fundamentals that Mr. Aquino has put in place must be nursed
gingerly to maturity, until it can stand the test of economic and political
greed. For progress in our country, it can be strongly argued, will remain a
dream until corruption will breathe its last breath on the Philippine earth. At
this moment, Mr. Aquino is the man. He is the man to steer our independence
from the bondage of wrong politics.
And yet, the righteous minds
that crafted the six-year term for the Philippine president, in preemption of
future dictatorial inclinations, have misread the future: that a well meant
politician would one day emerge from nowhere to institute the rightful reforms
for the Filipinos. The chance to sustain our momentum for change will soon
become an era gone by if we choose to be passive on the raging debate of
whether or not President Aquino must stay further in office.
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